“It was quite a shock,” she said of a fire that started on Friday afternoon and quickly consumed two houses and an abandoned structure. “We had a large fire in 2011 and there was multiple homes lost in that fire, so you had a little bit of flashback to what happened there and the concerns and – scared. We were scared!”

The Yakama Nation declared a state of emergency on the reservation Sunday morning. Sanchey, who evacuated with her kids and dog, said response to the fire was heavy all weekend.

“It almost makes you emotional to see people just responding and then the air tankers coming in so quickly,” Sanchey said. “I really truly believe that those air drops that they made of retardant saved our community.”

Oregon’s two largest wildfires are burning in the southwest corner of the state, along the California border near Medford. The Taylor Creek fire, at over 45,000 acres and the Klondike fire, at over 47,000 acres are growing large enough that they might merge - something fire managers hope to avoid.

With no rain in the forecast, officials don’t expect the threat of wildfire to let up any time soon.

“The natural humidity occurring right now out in the rangelands is less than kiln dried lumber,” said Ben Shearer, an information officer on the Grass Valley Fire that quickly spread over 20 miles Saturday and threatened residents, ranches and livestock near the Grand Coulee Dam.

“So, if you go to a lumber yard right now and buy a two-by-four, that’s been dried in a kiln to about 15 percent moisture content, and right now most of the fuels out in the wildlands are like less than 10 percent,” he said.

The Grass Valley Fire started mid-day Saturday. Its cause is unknown, but wind helped it grow to an estimated 45,000 acres by Sunday morning. By Sunday night, fire officials said better mapping showed it had grown closer to 75,000 acres, making it the largest fire burning in the state. The extremely dry brushland where it started mixed with wind blowing directly west pushed it fast toward the tourist-heavy Grand Coulee Dam and Banks Lake area.

“15 to 20 mile-an-hour winds was actually pushing the fire faster than firefighters could work with it,” Shearer said.

A firefighter was injured while working on the fire and was flown to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle for treatment. At least 300 people were told to evacuate their homes in the towns of Grand Coulee and Coulee Dam, above and below the dam, respectively.

State Highway 174 was also closed because of downed power lines and, Shearer said, due to livestock seeking refuge on the road.

“That’s not uncommon to have cattle and sheep and horses and whatever, wildlife get up on the road when there’s a fire,” he said.

Transmission lines were down and a number of homes had lost power near Grand Coulee. At least 30 power poles were lost to the separate fire near White Swan, according to Elizabeth Sanchey.

And in Ferry County, Washington, the Boyd’s Fire had also knocked out power to a number of homes most of the day Sunday and destroyed two homes and several outbuildings.

If all goes according to plan, there could soon be salmon above the Grand Coulee Dam again. That’s according to Cody Desautel, director of Natural Resources for the Confederated Tribes of the Colville.